Patents by Inventor Wyatt Davis

Wyatt Davis has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7999244
    Abstract: Embodiments relate to a MEMS device including a scanner rotatable about at least one rotation axis, with the scanner having a characteristic resonant frequency. According to one embodiment, the MEMS device includes drive electronics operable to generate a drive signal that causes the scanner to oscillate at an operational frequency about the at least one rotation axis. The drive signal has a drive frequency selected to be about equal to the characteristic resonant frequency or a sub-harmonic frequency of the characteristic resonant frequency. According to another embodiment, the drive electronics are operable to generate a drive signal having a plurality of drive-signal pulses that moves the scanner at an operational frequency and sensing electronics are operable to sense a position of the scanner only when the drive-signal pulses of the drive signal are not being transmitted by the drive electronics. The MEMS device embodiments may be incorporated in scanned beam imagers, endoscopes, and displays.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 2007
    Date of Patent: August 16, 2011
    Assignee: Microvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Wyatt Davis, Gregory T. Gibson, Hakan Urey, Thomas W. Montague, Bin Xue, John Lewis
  • Publication number: 20090153932
    Abstract: Embodiments relate to a MEMS device including a scanner rotatable about at least one rotation axis, with the scanner having a characteristic resonant frequency. According to one embodiment, the MEMS device includes drive electronics operable to generate a drive signal that causes the scanner to oscillate at an operational frequency about the at least one rotation axis. The drive signal has a drive frequency selected to be about equal to the characteristic resonant frequency or a sub-harmonic frequency of the characteristic resonant frequency. According to another embodiment, the drive electronics are operable to generate a drive signal having a plurality of drive-signal pulses that moves the scanner at an operational frequency and sensing electronics are operable to sense a position of the scanner only when the drive-signal pulses of the drive signal are not being transmitted by the drive electronics. The MEMS device embodiments may be incorporated in scanned beam imagers, endoscopes, and displays.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 18, 2007
    Publication date: June 18, 2009
    Applicant: Microvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Wyatt Davis, Gregory T. Gibson, Hakan Urey, Thomas W. Montague, Bin Xue, John Lewis
  • Publication number: 20080042052
    Abstract: A MEMS oscillator, such as a MEMS scanner, has an improved and simplified drive scheme and structure. Drive impulses may be transmitted to an oscillating mass via torque through the support arms. For multi-axis oscillators drive signals for two or more axes may be superimposed by a driver circuit and transmitted to the MEMS oscillator. The oscillator responds in each axis according to its resonance frequency in that axis. The oscillator may be driven resonantly in some or all axes. Improved load distribution results in reduced deformation. A simplified structure offers multi-axis oscillation using a single moving body. Another structure directly drives a plurality of moving bodies. Another structure eliminates actuators from one or more moving bodies, those bodies being driven by their support arms.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 19, 2007
    Publication date: February 21, 2008
    Inventors: Randall Sprague, Jun Yan, Jason Tauscher, Wyatt Davis, John Lewis, Dean Brown, Thomas Montague, Chancellor Brown
  • Publication number: 20070109560
    Abstract: An electrophotographic printer includes an exposure unit having a MEMS scanner operable to scan a beam of light across a photoconductor. The MEMS scanner includes a mirror having an aspect ratio similar to the shape of the facets of a conventional rotating polygon scanner. In a preferred embodiment, the scan mirror has a length of about 750 microns in a dimension parallel to its axis of rotation and a length of about 8 millimeters in a dimension perpendicular to its axis of rotation. The MEMS scanner is operable to scan at a frequency of about 5 KHz and an angular displacement of about 20 degrees zero-to-peak mechanical scan angle.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 9, 2006
    Publication date: May 17, 2007
    Inventors: Randall Sprague, Wyatt Davis, Dean Brown, Yoshiro Koga, Nobumasa Abe, Yujiro Nomura
  • Publication number: 20050280879
    Abstract: A resonant MEMS scanning system operates a MEMS scanner at its resonant frequency to maximize scan angle and minimize power consumption. A controller includes a phase locked loop, an amplitude servo control loop, and a resonant frequency servo control loop. A microprocessor controls the loops and provides override during conditions such as start-up. Resonant frequency is dynamically thermally trimmed, allowing the device to be operated at higher Q. The phase lock loop operates in a pre-lock condition to allow faster start-up. Resonant frequency is controlled open loop during idle and start-up. Drive voltage is set high during start-up to achieve a rapid rise in scan angle.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 12, 2004
    Publication date: December 22, 2005
    Inventors: Gregory Gibson, Wyatt Davis, Dean Brown, Randall Sprague
  • Publication number: 20050253055
    Abstract: A MEMS oscillator, such as a MEMS scanner, has an improved and simplified drive scheme and structure. Drive impulses may be transmitted to an oscillating mass via torque through the support arms. For multi-axis oscillators drive signals for two or more axes may be superimposed by a driver circuit and transmitted to the MEMS oscillator. The oscillator responds in each axis according to its resonance frequency in that axis. The oscillator may be driven resonantly in some or all axes. Improved load distribution results in reduced deformation. A simplified structure offers multi-axis oscillation using a single moving body. Another structure directly drives a plurality of moving bodies. Another structure eliminates actuators from one or more moving bodies, those bodies being driven by their support arms.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 9, 2004
    Publication date: November 17, 2005
    Inventors: Randall Sprague, Jun Yan, Jason Tauscher, Wyatt Davis, John Lewis, Dean Brown, Thomas Montague, Chancellor Brown
  • Publication number: 20050179976
    Abstract: A high performance MEMS scanner is disclosed. In some embodiments, scanner mirror has a wide and short aspect ratio that is similar to rotating polygon facets. Long torsion arms allow large rotation angles including 20° zero-to-peak mechanical and greater. Suspensions couple the scan mirror to torsion arms, reducing dynamic mirror deformation by spreading the torque load. “leverage members” at the distal ends of the torsion arms help reduce stress concentrations. Elimination of a mounting frame increases device yield. Heater leads allow for precise trimming of the scanner resonant frequency. A compressive mount holds mounting pads against mounting structures.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 12, 2004
    Publication date: August 18, 2005
    Inventors: Wyatt Davis, Dean Brown, Thomas Montague, Randall Sprague
  • Publication number: 20050173770
    Abstract: Devices are formed on a semiconductor wafer in an interdigitated relationship and are released by deep reactive ion etching. MEMS scanners are formed without a surrounding frame. Mounting pads extend outward from torsion arms. Neighboring MEMS scanners are formed with their mounting pads interdigitated such that a regular polygon cannot be formed around a device without also intersecting a portion of one or more neighboring devices. MEMS scanners may be held in their outlines by a metal layer, by small semiconductor bridges, or a combination.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 12, 2004
    Publication date: August 11, 2005
    Inventors: Kelly Linden, Mark Helsel, Dean Brown, Randall Sprague, Wyatt Davis